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Cognition and Deafness (Part 1)
Cognition
Questions like what do deaf people think in?
Relative intelligence as a group
Interesting serious question about this
Is the way deaf people use their intelligence different from that of hearing
people; becaus

Cued speech
- making English visible in a very different way than we have been talking about (total
communication) looks like sign language, but it isnt.
- Focused on making lip reading clearer
Phonemes instead of morphemes
- Orin Cornett invented CS in 1

CSD 308K STUDY GUIDE - EXAM #2
Family dynamics & early psychological development
Parental reaction cycle
Early behaviors (pre-diagnosis)
o For hearing parents, a diagnosis is a medical determination, with little to no
information beforehand on what to ex

Deaf commonalities and bonding
Common communication (ASL)
Subject to stigma
Sense of not fitting in
Sense of being other (non-hearing)
Difficulty communicating with the hearing world
Difficulties/challenges in education, work, etc.
Being overlooked

Perspectives of Deafness
8/30/2016
What
do you think it would be like to be a deaf person?
Out of place dont feel you belong
Big sense of community Austin deaf population, school for the deaf
Music
Deaf the sense of hearing is non-functional for ordinary

Total Communication
1880s through approx. 1970: Oral philosophy tecniques
1970 to late 1980s: Total Communication, use of exact systems (Manually-Coded English)
- Reason deaf education wasn't working was because we were insisting on making deaf
kids liste

Oralism
Worries
- How do you get a child to eat healthy foods?
- How do you explain things?
1880s through approx. 1970: Oral philosophy techniques
Conference in Milan: deaf experts gathered from all around the world to discuss the best
efforts to educate

-
Focus on the action for the paper
Families of Young Deaf Children
What we are going to describe is worst case scenario
o If we did nothing there is a bunch of bad shit that could end up happening with
babies as they grow developmentally
o However, we d

CSD 395H
American Sign Language
Sign language studies
- Sign as an object of linguistics research
- Prior to 1960s it was not taken seriously
o Didn't think it was an actual language
o Thought they were just acting out or miming
o Thought they were using

Language and Literacy
Language and Literacy
The importance of context
Integrating speech, language, cognition, and literacy
o Same as you teach a hearing child
Language experience activities
o Kind of activity designed with class or individual child that

CSD 308K STUDY GUIDE FOR FINAL EXAM
*Note: There is a table of contents for this study guide! I applied this for easier access within the document
so when you put in your information, please be cautious of how you paste your notes/answers so it doesnt
mes

9.24.15
Stigma
-discrediting trait
-feature of a person that marks them as other
-having some sort of a negative difference
-in any society there are lots of people who will look at someone who is different from
then and automatically assume something neg

9.17.15
American Sign Language
Prior to 1960s not taken seriously
1960s-William Stokoes Work
Myths:
Sign language is universal
Signs are elaborate gestures
Sign language is iconic
Even though many signs are iconic in real world use, that iconicity may not

9.10.15
capital D Deaf= someone who identifies as a cultural deaf person.
Lower case d deaf= audiological fact of not having hearing.
What is the DEAF-WORLD?
Deaf Cultural Communitya class/group of people with common characteristics or
pursuits and a part

9.15.15
-speaking and thinking like hearing people disparaged when among Deaf people
-because that is HEARING, not DEAF culture.
-Deaf Residential School
-like family, because the child grows up there
-ties are lifelong
-graduates commonly work at the sch

9.8.15
know how to interpret audiograms! & know where normal speech falls on an audiogram!
Residual Hearing-the hearing that remains after a person has a hearing loss.
Pure Tone Average- how to find it? Know which numbers are severe-profound. Take three
f

Study Guide Exam I CSD 306K
It is important that you review your notes from our class discussions, the PowerPoint slides, supplemental materials
in Canvas, and the book for the exam. The topics below will give you focus areas in order to prioritize your
s

Social Identity and Deafness Part 2
Paddens Goals of the Deaf Community
Acceptance of Deaf People
Respect for Deaf culture
Encouragement, respect for the use of sign language
- If you are a member of the deaf community these are your goals
Hearing Cent

Phonetics Review Sheet: Exam 1
Key Terms/Concepts:
Phonetics
The study of sounds in the production of
human speech. Not only English. ONLY
speech, not other sounds.
Approaches to study phonetics and
examples (theres 6) Perceptual
perspective = auditory &